Metal Hammer (UK)

ANDREW W.K.

tense. Distraught. anxious. these are not words you’d normally associate with the Prince of Party. and yet, on an unsual encounter in chicago, we found a man finally facing down his demons

- WORDS: ELEANOR GOODMAN • PICS: JEREMY SAFFER

When it’s time to party… andrew W.K. has a good think about it. We head to chicago for a serious chat.

Even with a baseball cap pulled low over his face, the man walking into the room is unmistakab­le. White t-shirt. White jeans. Shoulder-length dark hair. the only thing missing is his trademark bloody nose. andrew W.K. arrives alone today. No manager, no publicist. he reaches out his hand and politely greets us, before making himself comfortabl­e on an old chest in a quiet corner of this chilly photo studio a couple of hours outside chicago. We ask if he wants to sit on the high chairs in front of the flashbulb-studded vanity mirror. he declines. We ask if we can sit next to him. he declines again; he prefers to sit opposite interviewe­rs. What follows is an exceptiona­lly intense couple of hours – unexpected­ly so for an encounter with the self-described King of Partying.

Bursting onto our screens in 2001 with his riotous video for Party Hard, andrew W.K. split opinion. to some, he was the crusading idealist we needed, creating anthems that encouraged people to let go. to others, he was a joke figure who was ruining heavy music. Yet his career expanded into new realms: he co-founded New York club Santos Party house

(though it’s since closed), hosted the children’s gameshow Destroy Build Destroy, DJ’d on Black Sabbath’s 2013 tour and became a motivation­al speaker, even giving a talk at the oxford Union. Now he’s poised to release his first true rock album since Close Calls With Brick Walls – 12 years ago. But he is worried.

“You realise that time can go by very quickly – especially when you’re partying very hard,” he deadpans. “and for better or worse, so much of what I’ve had the privilege of doing has been presented to me as opportunit­ies, meaning a lot of what I’ve wound up doing, I didn’t choose to do in the traditiona­l sense of coming up with a particular project. You start to realise that some of the best things that you’ve ever done have very little to do with you. You just showed up for the assignment.”

he is visibly disturbed, his body tense. at the same time as getting these amazing breaks, like partying with the godfathers of heavy metal, there was some unsettling static in the background; something intangible and unnerving. he feared he was failing to take control of his own destiny.

“It was at times very confusing and distressin­g,” he sighs in frustratio­n. “I thought maybe I was being really irresponsi­ble. I was looking around at other people that seemed very successful. ‘are they setting goals? are they being more cutthroat?’ I couldn’t deny that what I’d gotten to do brought me to where I was now, and I had to assume it was all for the best. and if I thought of all the other avenues I could have taken, it almost seemed disrespect­ful to all the good things that had happened. So it almost seemed like it wasn’t my concern. Which is a very strange feeling – to think that your own life or work isn’t your concern. It is not up to me.”

he believes in a higher power, though not necessaril­y the ‘Party Gods’ he flippantly refers to elsewhere in our conversati­on. It’s something that’s bigger than him, whether it’s another person or a group of people, or some vague “other forces”. again, this idea, this not knowing, bothers him. that word comes up again: distressin­g.

“I turn myself over to these forces. Whether they’re higher, or maybe it’s a lower power,” he says, brow furrowing and staring hard into the middle distance. “that’s the real question – that’s where it can get very distressin­g, because you think, ‘Well, maybe I’m doing the exact opposite of what I’m supposed to be doing.’

“Now, for the first time, I’m trying to listen to a voice inside that has always been there, but I never had the courage to listen to 100%. and since I’ve been listening to it, I’ve definitely felt a level of… I guess joy. a kind of quiet, subdued, maybe even melancholy joy, that I’ve never felt before. Where all of the dread that surrounded a lot of my activities or decisions has been removed.”

New album You’re Not Alone is the result of listening to that voice. It is, he says, the record he’s been trying to make since 2005. a bombastic, euphoric, fist-in-the-air set of major-key songs with guitars and piano at the heart, it plays out like a soundtrack to the most uplifting musical you’ve never heard. the lyrics acknowledg­e the hardship of the human experience, but advocate pushing through. the vocals are multitrack­ed – he’s previously commented that he wants listeners to feel as though his music bears an everyman voice, not an individual one – and the flow is disrupted by three short motivation­al speeches.

“I recorded those almost sort of spontaneou­sly, and had a very hard time listening to them afterwards,” he admits. “Because that was the most exposed thing. the album is so laboured over, and the layers of music bolster me and make me feel bigger and stronger and more powerful than I am when it’s just me talking – not even singing – alone, where you have the power of melody to infuse your voice with beauty. But, I’m glad they’re on there.”

the album fits with his much-publicised commitment to Party hard. he’s written extensive columns, essays, letters and tweets about what that actually means, going beyond the convention­al meaning of getting drunk with mates and cutting right to the heart of living a meaningful life. When we ask how much of him as a person is in the record, and how much of it is andrew W.K. the performer, he talks of how they both cyclically feed into the “mission”.

“that’s the same thing. I feel like I’ve been given the opportunit­y to generate this life-affirming feeling – literally like a life-force feeling. this mission for me is that if someone says, ‘oh, there’s that andrew W.K. guy,’ I want the feeling they get to be like they just took a big breath, or they just drank a bunch of coffee. they feel like they’re alive and they can do something with it. But I wanna get that out of it, too. that’s what andrew W.K. is supposed to be for me – to make me feel amped-up about not being dead.” have you struggled with depression in the past?

“that was the beginning of the whole musical thing, back when I was five years old, with my piano teacher playing me songs,” he explains.

“It was realising that there were few things that made life feel different. and it wasn’t just a surface difference, it was an internal, physical difference. the mind is just there to interpret, at best, what’s actually going on in your body. and music made me feel alive. every time. It was sort of like this orgasmic feeling.”

there has long been an aura of mystery around andrew W.K.. In the mode of a self-help book, his language is deeply analytical, reflective and intimate, yet he never gives too much of himself away. In the late 2000s, there were rumours – which he strenuousl­y denied – that his persona was manufactur­ed. there were also lengthy legal troubles that prevented him from releasing music in the US, leading up to his improvisat­ional piano album, 2009’s Cadillac 55. We don’t even know what we’re doing in chicago today; last we heard, he had a place in New York. he tells us that he left the city four-and-a-half years ago, that he and his wife, cherie, have been bouncing between short-term situations, and that it’s almost like being on the road in his early days. to make this album, he’s spent time in

Illinois, texas, california, New York, Florida, Wisconsin and arizona.

“there was a time… things became shadowy in New York, maybe right after Close Calls With Brick Walls up until now,” he says. “Some of the best things happened, like meeting cherie, but also some of the most challengin­g experience­s. real complicati­ons with business, decisions I made that came back to bother me and haunt me and challenge me. and there was also an effort where I thought that if I could go against myself enough, I could become someone else. and so having a home, for example, was a real effort in thinking that if I did that, I was going to feel this happiness – be like a real person. But deep down inside, you’re just building up more and more tension against your true self. and I think I’m now trying to just do what I’m meant to do, instead of what I think I should do.”

We press him on his personal circumstan­ces, but he won’t be drawn. If he’s angry, he doesn’t show it. although for a large portion of our chat, he adopts

“ANDREW W.K. mAKEs mE fEEl AmpED-Up AbOUT

NOT bEING DEAD”

CREATING MUSIC IS LIFE-AFFIRMING FOR THE PARTY KING

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